India cuts rates to 5.25% as expected as central bank flags ‘weakness in some key economic indicators’

C

CNBC Finance

Dec 05, 2025

2 min read

Download Gold Price Tracker & Alerts

Get the app to explore more features and stay updated

Key Points
  • India's central bank has cut the key policy rate by 25 basis points to 5.25%, in line with estimates.
  • Industrial output, PMI and export declines underscore cooling momentum as tariffs weigh on demand.
The Reserve Bank of India logo outside its headquarters in Mumbai on Feb. 7, 2025. 
Indranil Mukherjee | Afp | Getty Images

India's central bank cut its policy rate by 25 basis points to 5.25%, matching forecasts from economists polled by Reuters.

The monetary policy committee delivered a unanimous reduction, citing "weakness in some key economic indicators," even as headline inflation has eased significantly and is expected to be revised lower in the first quarter of 2025, said RBI governor Sanjay Malhotra.

The economy expanded 8.2% from July to September, outpacing expectations, while inflation remains subdued.

RBI's Malhotra, explaining the rationale for keeping rates unchanged at the last policy meeting in October, warned that although inflation moderated significantly in the first quarter, growth could still slow in the second half of the financial year due to global trade uncertainties.

Still, industrial activity in October fell to a 14-month low, and indicators such as HSBC's manufacturing PMI fell to a nine-month low in November, suggesting an economic slowdown.

Exports to the U.S., one of India's major trading partners, fell for a second straight month in October, sliding 8.5% from a year earlier to $6.3 billion. Overall outbound shipments in October also fell 11.8% to $34.38 billion.

Washington has imposed a 50% tariff on Indian goods since August. To offset the impact of the tariffs, New Delhi cut goods and services tax rates in September ahead of a month-long festive season to lift domestic demand.

GST tax collections showed a sharp improvement in October to 1.95 trillion rupees ($21.7 billion), up 4.6% from a year earlier, but the growth was muted in November with gross collection of 1.7 trillion rupees, a modest 0.7% increase.

The Indian rupee has weakened against the dollar in recent days, slipping past the important 90-rupee-per-dollar level on Wednesday before paring losses.

Despite a policy rate cut earlier this year, there has not been a "major pick up in bank lending," said Sanjay Mathur, ANZ's Chief Economist for India and Southeast Asia. He added that while there is also no clarity on the conclusion of a U.S.-India trade deal, the impact of tariffs is visible on the economy.

Published

December 05, 2025

Friday at 4:56 AM

Reading Time

2 minutes

~376 words

More Articles

Explore other insights and stories

Dec 06, 2025 CNBC Finance

SpaceX aims for $800 billion valuation in secondary share sale, WSJ reports

Elon Musk's SpaceX is reportedly launching an insider share sale that could value the company as high as $800 billion.

Read Article
Dec 05, 2025 CNBC Finance

Judge finalizes remedies in Google antitrust case

A U.S. judge on Friday finalized his decision for the consequences Google will face for its search monopoly ruling, adding new details to the decided remedies.

Read Article
Dec 05, 2025 CNBC Finance

The regulatory path ahead for a Netflix and Warner Bros. deal could get dicey

Regulatory questions are already rising about Netflix's deal to combine its business with WBD's streaming service HBO Max and film studio Warner Bros.

Read Article